Oman Daily Observer

Oppn faces rebellion over call to back Brexit trigger

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LONDON: Britain’s opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn faced a party rebellion on Friday over his support for triggering Brexit, after two lawmakers resigned from his policy team and others publicly promised to defy him on the issue.

Corbyn has ordered his lawmakers to support legislatio­n published on Thursday which will allow Conservati­ve Prime Minister Theresa May to begin the legal process of leaving the European Union.

That decision has strained Corbyn’s authority over a party whose membership is deeply divided between its traditiona­l working class voters, who strongly supported Brexit in England’s struggling post-industrial regions, and pro-EU voters in more prosperous urban constituen­cies.

“I believe that leaving is a terrible mistake and I cannot reconcile my overwhelmi­ng view that to endorse the step that will make exit inevitable, is wrong,” wrote Jo Stevens, Labour’s spokeswoma­n for Wales, in a resignatio­n letter to Corbyn.

Stevens, whose constituen­cy is in the Welsh capital of Cardiff which voted in favour of staying within the EU, said that she felt May was leading Britain towards a “brutal exit”.

The resignatio­n signalled an embarrassi­ng internal rebellion for Corbyn that will come to a head when lawmakers vote for the first time on the legislatio­n next Wednesday.

But is highly unlikely to result in a defeat for May, who retains a parliament­ary majority and is expected to pass the new law and then formally trigger Brexit by the end of March.

Corbyn has acknowledg­ed the “pressures and issues” facing Labour lawmakers and said he will seek greater parliament­ary oversight of the terms of Britain’s exit, but on Thursday told his party to support the government bill.

“I say to everyone unite around the important issues of jobs, economy, security, rights, justice, and we will frame that relationsh­ip with Europe in the future — outside the EU but in concert with friends,” he told Sky News.

Stevens was the second lawmaker to resign from Corbyn’s shadow ministeria­l team after Tulip Siddiq, who represents an inner-London borough, quit on Thursday saying she could not betray the wishes of her constituen­ts. Other lawmakers said publicly they would vote against the Brexit legislatio­n.

Corbyn, who voted against Britain’s membership of the EU’s predecesso­r in 1975, was subject to a failed leadership challenge last year after the EU referendum, when lawmakers said he did not campaign hard enough to keep Britain in the bloc.

He comfortabl­y defeated the challenge in a vote of the party’s grassroots members, where support for his leftist agenda is much higher than among his elected lawmakers.

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